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Mendel

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During gamete formation different pairs of alleles segregate independently of each other ... method - 24 = 16 possible gamete. combinations for each parent ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Mendel


1
Mendels Breakthrough
  • Patterns, Particles, and Principles of Heredity

2
Outline of Mendelian Genetics
  • The historical puzzle of inheritance and how
    Mendels experimental approach helped solve it
  • Mendels approach to genetic analysis including
    his experiments and related analytic tools
  • A comprehensive example of Mendelian inheritance
    in humans

3
Gregor Mendel (1822-1844)
Fig. 2.2
4
Themes of Mendels work
  • Variation is widespread in nature
  • Observable variation is essential for following
    genes
  • Variation is inherited according to genetic laws
    and not solely by chance
  • Mendels laws apply to all sexually reproducing
    organisms.

5
The historical puzzle of inheritance
  • Artificial selection has been an important
    practice since before recorded history
  • Domestication of animals
  • Selective breeding of plants
  • 19th century precise techniques for controlled
    matings in plants and animals to produce desired
    traits in many of offspring
  • Breeders could not explain why traits would
    sometimes disappear and then reappear in
    subsequent generations.

6
State of genetics in early 1800s
  • What is inherited?
  • How is it inherited?
  • What is the role of chance in heredity?

7
Mendels workplace
Fig. 2.5
8
Historical theories of inheritance
  • One parent contributes most features (e.g.,
    homunculus, N. Hartsoiker, 1694)
  • Blending inheritance parental traits become
    mixed and forever changed in offspring

Fig.2.6
9
Keys to Mendels experiments
  • The garden pea was an ideal organism
  • Vigorous growth
  • Self fertilization
  • Easy to cross fertilize
  • Produced large number of offspring each
    generation
  • Mendel analyzed traits with discrete alternative
    forms
  • purple vs. white flowers
  • yellow vs. green peas
  • round vs. wrinkled seeds
  • long vs. short stem length
  • Mendel established pure breeding lines to conduct
    his experiments

10
Monohybrid crosses reveal units of inheritance
and Law of Segregation
Fig.2.9
11
Traits have dominant and recessive forms
  • Disappearance of traits in F1 generation and
    reappearance in the F2 generation disproves the
    hypothesis that traits blend
  • Trait must have two forms that can each breed
    true
  • One form must be hidden when plants with each
    trait are interbred
  • Trait that appears in F1 is dominant
  • Trait that is hidden in F1 is recessive

12
Alternative forms of traits are alleles
  • Each trait carries two copies of a unit of
    inheritance, one inherited from the mother and
    the other from the father
  • Alternative forms of traits are called alleles

13
Law of Segregation
  • Two alleles for each trait separate (segregate)
    during gamete formation, and then unite at
    random, one from each parent, at fertilization

Fig. 2.10
14
The Punnet Square
Fig. 2.11
15
Rules of Probability
Independent events - probability of two events
occurring together What is the probability that
both A and B will occur? Solution determine
probability of each and multiply them
together. Mutually exclusive events -
probability of one or another event occurring.
What is the probability of A or B
occurring? Solution determine the probability
of each and add them together.
16
Probability and Mendels Results
  • Cross Yy xYy pea plants.
  • Chance of Y sperm uniting with a Y egg
  • ½ chance of sperm with Y allele
  • ½ chance of egg with Y allele
  • Chance of Y and Y uniting ½ x ½ ¼
  • Chance of Yy offpsring
  • ½ chance of sperm with y allele and egg with Y
    allele
  • ½ chance of sperm with Y allele and egg with y
    allele
  • Chance of Yy (½ x ½) (½ x ½) 2/4, or 1/2

17
Further crosses confirm predicted ratios
Fig. 2.12
18
Genotypes and Phenotypes
  • Phenotype observable characteristic of an
    organism
  • Genotype pair of alleles present in and
    individual
  • Homozygous two alleles of trait are the same
    (YY or yy)
  • Heterozygous two alleles of trait are different
    (Yy)

19
Genotypes versus phenotpyes
Yy ? Yy 121 YYYyyy 31 yellow green
Fig. 2.13
20
Test cross reveals unkown genotpye
Fig. 2.14
21
Dihybrid crosses reveal the law of independent
assortment
  • A dihybrid is an individual that is heterozygous
    at two genes
  • Mendel designed experiments to determine if two
    genes segregate independently of one another in
    dihybrids
  • First constructed true breeding lines for both
    traits, crossed them to produce dihybrid
    offspring, and examined the F2 for parental or
    recombinant types (new combinations not present
    in the parents)

22
Results of Mendels dihybrid crosses
  • F2 generation contained both parental types and
    recombinant types
  • Alleles of genes assort independently, and can
    thus appear in any combination in the offspring

23
Dihybrid cross shows parental and recombinant
types
Fig. 2.15 top
24
Dihybrid cross produces a predictable ratio of
phenotypes
Fig. 2.15 bottom
25
The law of independent assortment
  • During gamete formation different pairs of
    alleles segregate independently of each other

Fig. 2.16
26
Summary of Mendel's work
  • Inheritance is particulate - not blending
  • There are two copies of each trait in a germ cell
  • Gametes contain one copy of the trait
  • Alleles (different forms of the trait) segregate
    randomly
  • Alleles are dominant or recessive - thus the
    difference between genotype and phenotype
  • Different traits assort independently

27
Laws of probability for multiple genes
28
Punnet Square method - 24 16 possible gamete
combinations for each parent Thus, a 16 ? 16
Punnet Square with 256 genotypes Thats one big
Punnet Square!
Loci Assort Independently - So we can look at
each locus independently to get the answer.
29
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30
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31
Rediscovery of Mendel
  • Mendels work was unappreciated and remained
    dormant for 34 years
  • Even Darwins theories were viewed with
    skepticism in the late 1800s because he could
    not explain the mode of inheritance of variation
  • In 1900, 16 years after Mendel died, four
    scientists rediscovered and acknowledged Mendels
    work, giving birth to the science of genetics

32
1900 - Carl Correns, Hugo deVries, and Erich von
Tschermak rediscover and confirm Mendels laws
Fig. 2.19
33
Mendelian inheritance in humans
  • Most traits in humans are due to the interaction
    of multiple genes and do not show a simple
    Mendelian pattern of inheritance.
  • A few traits represent single-genes. Examples
    include sickle-cell anemia, cystic fibrosis,
    Tay-Sachs disease, and Huntingtons disease (see
    Table 2.1 in text)
  • Because we can not do breeding experiments on
    humans, we use model organisms.

34
In humans we must use pedigrees to study
inheritance
  • Pedigrees are an orderly diagram of a families
    relevant genetic features extending through
    multiple generations
  • Pedigrees help us infer if a trait is from a
    single gene and if the trait is dominant or
    recessive

35
Anatomy of a pedigree
Fig. 2.20
36
A vertical pattern of inheritance indicates a
rare dominant trait
Fig. 2.20
Hunitingtons disease A rare dominant
trait Assign the genotypes by working backward
through the pedigree
37
A horizontal pattern of inheritance indicates a
rare recessive trait
Fig.2.21
Cystic fibrosis a recessive condition Assign the
genotypes for each pedigree
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